1 / 41

Law 227: Trademarks & Unfair Competition

Law 227: Trademarks & Unfair Competition. Loss of Rights, Due Diligence June 27, 2009 Jefferson Scher. TM & Unfair Comp — Day 9 Agenda. Loss of Rights Genericism/Genericide Abandonment Non-use, assignment in gross, naked licensing, failure to police Transactional Due Diligence

Télécharger la présentation

Law 227: Trademarks & Unfair Competition

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Law 227: Trademarks &Unfair Competition Loss of Rights, Due DiligenceJune 27, 2009Jefferson Scher

  2. TM & Unfair Comp — Day 9Agenda • Loss of Rights • Genericism/Genericide • Abandonment • Non-use, assignment in gross, naked licensing, failure to police • Transactional Due Diligence • Hypothetical acquisition of Rodeo Palms

  3. Loss of Rights: GenericismThe End of the Spectrum • Some terms start out generic • Filipino Yellow Pages: “what-are-you” • HOG (large motorcycles) • Others become generic through usage (trademark owner’s fault??) • Shredded Wheat • Aspirin (with the general public)

  4. Loss of Rights: GenericismJudging Genericism • Effect of third party non-trademark use: forced genericide of a mark? • Stix Products v. United Merchants • Public still recognized CON-TACT as a mark, so could not use the phrase descriptively • Freecycle Network v. Oey • Encouraging genericide isn’t “use” so it doesn’t violate the Lanham Act

  5. Loss of Rights: GenericismProving Public Perception: Surveys • Key is the term’s primary significance • Asking about generic names for products • 75% call a vacuum bottle “a thermos” – OK • 70-86% would use TEFLON pan when referring to a nonstick pan – AMBIGUOUS • Do you know a brand name? or classify as brand name or common name • Better show “lack of trademark significance”

  6. Loss of Rights: GenericismProving Public Perception: Indirect Evidence • Evidence of Advertising? • Welding Services Inc. v. Forman • Can’t own “Welding Services Inc.” but what about WSI? Possible if public perceives WSI as not merely equivalent to the generic • Advertising the acronym next to the phrase fails to prove independent meaning (if anything it hurts by spelling it out for customers)

  7. Loss of Rights: Abandonment“Abandonment” of Trademark Rights • Involuntary abandonment • Cease use without intention to resume • Assign mark without goodwill • License the mark without maintaining control of the nature and quality of goods on which it is used • Failure to police third party use (infringements)?

  8. Loss of Rights: Abandonment“Abandonment” of Rights via Assignment • Clark & Freeman v. Heartland Co.

  9. Transactional Due DiligenceOverview • Assess risk of TM-related transaction • IP aspect of corporate mergers, acquisitions, and asset purchases • Trademark licenses • Merchandising, franchising, ingredient • Settlement deals • Acquisition (sometimes with “license back”) of a registered or common law trademark

  10. Transactional Due DiligenceOverview • What is due diligence? • Verifying seller representations • Title to assets • Proper maintenance of assets • Understanding disclosed liabilities • Identifying undisclosed risks • Discharging a duty of care (Board to shareholders; experts to company)

  11. Transactional Due DiligenceOverview • What is it really? • Endless rounds of questioning • Enumerating assets, encumbrances, disputes, other liabilities • Drilling down to specifics • Independent investigation • Evaluation: how does it affect the deal?

  12. Registered Transactional Due DiligenceKey Trademark Inquiries • Identify trademark assets • Registrations and applications • Rights established through use • Rights obtained by license • Identify relevant agreements • Assignment and license • Coexistence, consent, and settlement

  13. Transactional Due DiligenceKey Trademark Inquiries • Identify disputes • Past and present actual disputes • Potential disputes • Identify trademark-like properties • Trade names, advertising slogans • Trade dress/product design • Domain names

  14. Transactional Due DiligenceKey Trademark Inquiries • Bottom line • Could you obtain title to the asset? • Would you be bound by contractual limitations on your use? • Could you use the asset without infringing the rights of others? • Could you stop others from using it? • Could you grow the business?

  15. Transactional Due DiligenceKey Trademark Inquiries • The real bottom line: How much should you pay for it?

  16. Transactional Due DiligenceHypothetical Scenario: Rodeo Palms • Acquisition of the RODEO PALMS business — or maybe just the brand • Buyer: Elegant Industries (your client) • Target: Rodeo Palms Fashions • Summary took many billable hours to compile, drew on a variety of sources, mined many unruly documents...

  17. Transactional Due DiligenceDisclosures and Follow-on Investigation • Asset Portfolio • RODEO PALMS • 26 word mark applications in 16 different jurisdictions • Notes/Questions • Inconsistent country selection – why? • Refused in CH – why? • Consent in US – need a copy of the file

  18. Transactional Due DiligenceDisclosures and Follow-on Investigation • Asset Portfolio • RODEO PALMS FASHIONS Logo • 8 special form applications in 8 different jurisdictions • Notes/Questions • Inconsistent country selection relative to RODEO PALMS – why?

  19. Transactional Due DiligenceDisclosures and Follow-on Investigation • Asset Portfolio • TROPICAL SMARTS tag line • Common law rights based on use in the U.S. and on the company’s web site • Notes/Questions • Never filed for registration – why? • Could be descriptive – enough use for secondary meaning?

  20. Transactional Due DiligenceDisclosures and Follow-on Investigation • Asset Portfolio • COOL BREEZE WINDOW • Common law rights based on use in the U.S. and on the company’s web site • Notes/Questions • Never filed for registration – why? • Descriptiveness/secondary meaning issues • Status on demand letter?!

  21. Transactional Due DiligenceDisclosures and Follow-on Investigation • Asset Portfolio • Interior and Exterior Store Design • Common law trade dress rights based on use in the U.S.; registration refused • Notes: • Applications refused – why? • Anything distinctive here? • Secondary meaning?

  22. Transactional Due DiligenceDisclosures and Follow-on Investigation • Asset Portfolio • Bottle and Dispenser Designs • Registered in the U.S. • Notes: • How was use established – was an appropriate license in place to the perfume manufacturer? • Ditto re: future control

  23. Transactional Due DiligenceDisclosures and Follow-on Investigation • Asset Portfolio • General questions for each case • What is the prosecution history? • Are any applications “dependent” (for example, Madrid Protocol)? • Any disclaimers or exclusions? • Any oppositions or extensions of the opposition period?

  24. Transactional Due DiligenceDisclosures and Follow-on Investigation • Asset Portfolio • More general questions for each case • Used as required to maintain rights in the relevant jurisdiction? • Recorded with the U.S. Customs service orother applicable anti-counterfeiting authorities?

  25. Transactional Due DiligenceDisclosures and Follow-on Investigation • Asset Portfolio • Domain name notes • What about RodeoPalms.com? • Review whois records – show proper title and control? • Follow up on agreements/disputes (our questionnaire perhaps did not ask for these as explicitly as it should have)

  26. Transactional Due DiligenceDisclosures and Follow-on Investigation • Agreements • RODEO PALMS CASUALS • FR, IT, UK for “clothing” • Licensed back to EuroFashion for “Europe” and “all other countries bordering the Mediterranean” • RPF not to use the identical mark in licensed territory

  27. Transactional Due DiligenceDisclosures and Follow-on Investigation • Agreements • In-store-boutique “guidelines” • Restrictions on mini-store signage and layout may require changes to standard look and feel of the brand (word mark or Logo) and/or retail concept (trade dress) • Licenses • Shoes, leather goods, sunglasses, perfume

  28. Transactional Due DiligenceDisclosures and Follow-on Investigation • Infringement • Inbound matters • Only Cool Breeze Fashions? Did we phrase our request broadly enough? • Outbound matters • Review counterfeiting cases/strategy • Review SMART TROPICAL files – is the “wait and see” approach justified?

  29. Transactional Due DiligenceDisclosures and Follow-on Investigation • Infringement • Contact RPF’s outside TM counsel • Copies of relevant files • Independent investigation • Trademark searches in relevant jurisdictions: analysis & opinion • Case law and docket searches in relevant jurisdictions

  30. Transactional Due DiligencePrioritizing and Focusing • A potential filter • History is on our side • Revenues first • Ensure that there will be a revenue stream, then worry about expenses • “80 - 20” • Disregard brand risk affecting less than 20% of revenues

  31. Transactional Due DiligencePrioritizing and Focusing • Applying the filter • Focus on key marks • RODEO PALMS and the RODEO PALMS FASHIONS Logo • Focus on key markets • United States • Focus on key questions...

  32. Transactional Due DiligencePrioritizing and Focusing • Key questions • Can Elegant acquire the rights? • RPF’s title to the marks • Encumbrances on title • Could Elegant use the marks? • Carry on the existing business • Could Elegant stop infringers? • Protect market for closely related goods

  33. Transactional Due DiligenceUsing a Checklist • Positive functions of a checklist • Sets the research agenda • For the acquiror; some parts can be sent to the target • Aids memory • Digression is to be expected, getting back on course is essential • Enables coordinated delegation

  34. Transactional Due DiligenceUsing a Checklist • Misuses of a checklist • Using it to conduct an interview • Use face time judiciously • Failing to customize it • Every deal, every target, is different • Failing to follow up on the responses • It’s not about checking off boxes! • Have a plan for dealing with revelations

  35. Transactional Due DiligenceReal World Problems: “Hard Targets” • Unable or unwilling to provide info • Ignorance due to turnover • Files unavailable for acquired brands • Active resistance • Unable or unwilling to sign off • Won’t warrant ownership • Unable to bridge gaps in title due to departures

  36. Transactional Due DiligenceReal World Problems: Mystery & Surprise • Expect the unexpected • Abandoned marks • Forgotten coexistence agreements • Unanswered demand letters • Accept real-world limitations • Lousy domain search tools • Start early and work fast, but expect lots of delays

  37. Transactional Due DiligencePapering the Deal • Insist on “Goldilocks” paperwork • Merger agreement is too convoluted, the bill of sale is too skimpy... avoid confusion and disclosure of deal terms • What does seller need to provide? • Sign short form(s) of assignment • Ancillary authorizing documents, particularly for foreign marks

  38. Transactional Due DiligencePapering the Deal • This can be a big deal... • Different rules in most jurisdictions • Witnesses to the assignment • Consideration • Some require corporate seal • Power of attorney for seller • Business/corporate authority certificates, etc.

  39. Transactional Due DiligencePapering the Deal • Get seller’s signatures at closing! • Sellers may retire to a desert island • “Further assurances” don’t guarantee fast turnaround • But — be practical • Consolidate forms • Minimize notarization

  40. TM & Unfair Comp — Up NextTopics and Reading for Day 10 • Trade Dress • Ch. 7, pp. 481-496, Supp. pp. 51-52 • Ch. 7, pp. 496-541, Supp. pp. 52-54 • Online • Kendall-Jackson • TMEP Excerpts (optional)

More Related